โMay-04-2023 08:00 PM
โMay-09-2023 05:54 AM
K_and_I wrote:
These guys catch a lot of flack on the net, but it seems they have made conversions for quite a few different cars to tow trailers:
Can-Am
โMay-09-2023 05:29 AM
Grit dog wrote:
And once you establish that you canโt use a wdh and donโt have auto level/air ride, youโre probably not going to like how 450lbs on the hitch and a trunk full of โstuffโ handles. And neither will your car.
And if Iโm wrong youโll never know until you spend a bunch more money and do some irreversible major mods to the car or trailer.
Combined again with your obvious anxiety over towing it in the first place.
And They donโt make simple suspension enhancements for your car, like a cheap set of airbags or helper springs ( no wdh allowed, remember). Closest thing I found was an airlift kit for Q5 for $3k (so $4k for you plus a couple grand mechanic bill).
Youโre at the dealbreaker stage here. Period.
Before you take offense to any of this, I understand vehicles, trailers, mechanics, towing etc. Been doing it for 35 years as everything from a laborer to mechanic/fabricator to engineer to being responsible for 100s of people who tow โstuff.โ I could plasma the old hitch off and weld a new one on and have the first coat of paint dry by this afternoon, but if I was in your shoes Iโd not even consider it and step back and analyze which thing I wanted to keep and which one I wanted to switch out to make a compatible combination.
โMay-08-2023 12:48 PM
โMay-08-2023 09:30 AM
โMay-08-2023 09:20 AM
โMay-08-2023 09:13 AM
โMay-07-2023 08:22 PM
โMay-07-2023 05:56 PM
โMay-07-2023 05:25 PM
Durb wrote:Reisender wrote:valhalla360 wrote:Durb wrote:
You could take your trailer to a welder and have him remove the coupler, then weld another coupler to the underside of the frame. It looks like you would pick up 5-6 inches.
I believe this is a unibody vehicle...ie: there is no frame to weld to.
He might be talking about the trailer side. Not sure.
Yes, that is why I wrote to take the trailer in. Many trailers (generally heavier) have the front "A" section welded to the underside of the trailer's main frame. There are couplers on Amazon perfectly suited to be welded to the underside of your frame moving the hitch ball height down a number of inches. Problem solved; trailer tows level. Much simpler than trying to work on the SUV side of the equation.
โMay-07-2023 01:02 PM
Durb wrote:Reisender wrote:ivalhalla360 wrote:Durb wrote:
You could take your trailer to a welder and have him remove the coupler, then weld another coupler to the underside of the frame. It looks like you would pick up 5-6 inches.
I believe this is a unibody vehicle...ie: there is no frame to weld to.
He might be talking about the trailer side. Not sure.
Yes, that is why I wrote to take the trailer in. Many trailers (generally heavier) have the front "A" section welded to the underside of the trailer's main frame. There are couplers on Amazon perfectly suited to be welded to the underside of your frame moving the hitch ball height down a number of inches. Problem solved; trailer tows level. Much simpler than trying to work on the SUV side of the equation.
โMay-07-2023 12:53 PM
Reisender wrote:valhalla360 wrote:Durb wrote:
You could take your trailer to a welder and have him remove the coupler, then weld another coupler to the underside of the frame. It looks like you would pick up 5-6 inches.
I believe this is a unibody vehicle...ie: there is no frame to weld to.
He might be talking about the trailer side. Not sure.
โMay-07-2023 12:06 PM
โMay-07-2023 11:56 AM
valhalla360 wrote:JBarca wrote:
2. The top of the tow ball is to be no more than 6 1/4" above the centerline of the 5/8" ball mount locking pin.
Minor Correction: The center of the ball can't be more than 6 1/4" behind the pin hole...NOT ABOVE.
โMay-07-2023 11:50 AM
valhalla360 wrote:Durb wrote:
You could take your trailer to a welder and have him remove the coupler, then weld another coupler to the underside of the frame. It looks like you would pick up 5-6 inches.
I believe this is a unibody vehicle...ie: there is no frame to weld to.